The History of Thailand

The History of Thailand 

The people of Thailand originally lived in southwest China, for many centuries they moved to the mainland south east Asia. The earliest known exonym Siamese mention of their existence in the region has taken a 12th century inscription in the Khmer temple complex of Cambodia's Ankorbhat, which is called Stan, or "dark brown", people refer to.  "Sanam" can originate from the eternal "dark" Sanskrit, referring to the color of relative skin of its local people. Chinese: 暹 羅; Pinyin: Xiānluó Sukhothai and Sawankhalok were the names for the northern kingdom of the center, but themselves from Thai, the country's name has always been in Mueang Thai. The name of the country as the fasting by the West probably came from Portuguese, the first Europeans could have given the country a consistent calculation. Portuguese Chronicles noted that Borommatrailokkanat, Ayutthaya, 1455 at the southern tip of the Malay Peninsula to make the Sultanate of Malacca to the king of the kingdom. Malacca sent a diplomatic mission to Portuguese Ayutthaya, sent to 1511 following their victory. After one century, on August 15, 1612, the birth of a letter from Globe, an East India Company businessman, King James, came to "Syam's Road". 18 "At the end of the 19th century, Siam was so devoted to the geographical nomenclature that it is believed that by this name and anyone else it will be known and stylized." ​​16 Indonesian states such as Man, Khmer Empire and the Malaysian Peninsula and the Sumatran Regions ruled. Thailand has established their own state: Naogaiing, Sukhothai Kingdom, Chiang Mai Kingdom, Lan Na and Ayuttha Kingdom. These states fight each other and threaten from Khmer, Burma and Vietnam. Many later, European colonial power threatened 19 and early 20th century, but Thailand only survived as the state of Southeast Asia, to avoid European colonial rule because French and British decided it would avoid conflicts between their colonies in a neutral region. After the end of the full monarchy in 1932, Thailand tolerated almost sixty years of permanent military rule before the establishment of a democratically elected government system. There was another coup in 2014. more information 

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